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More EBITDA losses at Uber Freight but Ron touts brokerage-TMS integration

CEO sees Uber Freight as more SaaS-like than a typical digital brokerage

Lior Ron of Uber Freight is high on its future even as EBITDA losses continue. (Photos: Uber Freight, Jim Allen/FreightWaves)

The EBITDA losses keep piling up quarter after quarter at Uber Freight, but CEO Lior Ron offered nothing but optimism in an earnings preview interview, saying the integration between the legacy digital brokerage with Transplace is mostly complete and its future is looking up.

Uber Freight’s earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization for the first quarter, released Wednesday as part of the parent company’s (NYSE: UBER) earnings report, showed a loss of $21 million. That is $2 million better than the first quarter of 2023 but worse than every other quarter of 2023 as well as the fourth quarter of 2022. In 2022’s third quarter, Uber Freight posted positive EBITDA of $1 million, the only quarter it has ended up in the black on an EBITDA basis.

Among other highlights in the quarterly earnings report, Uber Freight’s revenue declined 8% to $1.28 billion, down from $1.4 billion. That revenue was flat sequentially.

Uber Freight announced its acquisition of Transplace in 2022, bringing together a leading provider of transportation management system technology with the digital brokerage. Despite the continued EBITDA losses, Ron said in the interview that the progress envisioned when the acquisition was made is on track.


“We are the largest transportation management and TMS provider in the industry,” Ron said, measuring that by what he said was $18 billion of freight under management.

And even though the losses are growing rather than retreating, Ron said he likes where Uber Freight is now. “More than half the business has a very stable and growing revenue stream,” he said. “It is more a SaaS (software-as-a-service)-like business that is completely separate from the ebbs and flows of marketplace pricing that brokerages are exposed to.”

Highlighting the differences with Convoy

Prior to the collapse of digital brokerage Convoy last year, it was hard not to think of that company without immediately thinking of Uber Freight as the leading pair of digital brokerages. Ron acknowledges it but bristles at the comparison and pushes back quickly.

He again referred to the SaaS analogy and said Uber Freight’s model “has nothing to do with pricing going up or pricing going down.”


As a result of the transportation management capabilities of Transplace, Ron said, Uber Freight has a 96% retention rate with TMS customers. The relationships that develop as a result of that are “much more strategic with big Fortune 500 companies than any broker can ever aspire to because you are essentially their trusted logistics adviser.” Being able to “upsell” various services through the capabilities for the legacy Transplace business “is not comparable to any broker,” Ron said.

Those ties with a wider variety of shippers due to TMS capabilities and more midmarket truckload carriers because of the wide adoption of the Uber Freight platform, Ron said, mean Uber Freight can reduce its exposure to the larger enterprise customers, “who are going to be the most demanding in a market cycle like this one.”

Asked if the structure of Uber Freight could be viewed as the brokerage activities of the company primarily supporting the transportation management activities, with the latter more of the company’s core, Ron demurred and said the two businesses are supporting each other.

The level of integration

He said Uber Freight is “80% integrated” and “it’s playing out exactly or even exceeding our expectations.” He conceded there was no firm way to measure that 80%, but that it largely meant “we’ve done a lot of the hard stuff and we still have a lot of opportunity here.”

“We’ve built the largest virtual fleet in the industry,” Ron said, putting the number of truck owners who have downloaded the Uber Freight app at more than 2 million. “The market will continue to be more efficient as we continue to tap into the long tail of supply.”

Uber Freight announced its acquisition of Transplace in 2022, bringing together a leading provider of TMS technology with the digital brokerage. Despite the continued EBITDA losses, Ron said the progress envisioned when the acquisition was made is on track.

In the interview prior to this month’s earnings report, he said being part of a public company helps give Uber Freight “the ability to control our own destiny and invest for the long term while of course balancing the short-term needs of the business.”

A public company’s ability to access capital can be seen in the TMS technology investment announced last fall, Ron said, and going further back, in the $2.25 billion it spent to acquire Transplace.


Uber Freight announced last fall major improvements to its suite of offerings, driven by technology including AI. In a press briefing held at the same time as Uber Freight’s Deliver user conference, Ron said the efforts led Uber Freight to “really reimagine what would it mean to mobilize the TMS system and take that to the next level.” He said that the user interface was “super intuitive and super easy to use.”

Ron hinted during his latest interview that new announcements of technological advances may be coming within weeks.

“It’s really thinking about how to build a single carrier engagement platform so they can tap into the network,” he said of what might be coming soon. What both sides of the divide between the carriers using the Uber Freight app and the shippers securing that capacity and using the Uber Freight TMS want is “volume and opportunities,” he said. 

It’s been awhile since questions were raised about whether Uber Freight fit in the Uber portfolio. It’s not an afterthought, but a transcript of the Wednesday call with analysts shows no questions on the call about Uber Freight.

Ron said recent hires out of key competitors show the parent company is committed to Uber Freight. Those hires include Dan Annunziata out of C.H. Robinson (NASDAQ: CHRW). When Greenbriar Equity took a $500 million stake in Uber Freight in 2020, Ron declared at the time that Uber Freight was “here for the long haul.”

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7 Comments

  1. Not Uber At All

    Their problem is the culture of their leadership team largely has no accountability. It’s about feelings and politics – not about business results. They have been trying to figure out a path to profitability for their truck brokerage from the minute they merged with Transplace. Their Trans Mgmt, Intermodal, and Mexico divisions are quite profitable – but their OTR brokerage bleeds by the minute. Dara has to be considering making moves with some of that team if he is serious about staying in freight and not subsidizing it every quarter…

  2. Not so uber

    Lior Ron (Liar Ron?) must be afraid for his job. It’s disgusting to say “Everything is great, on track, and we’re happy with progress” when you lose ANOTHER $22 million after loss after loss after loss…………..

    This is not how a CEO of a company that’s bleeding to death should act. He should say “I’m pissed. This is terrible. We MUST do better”. Instead, “everything is going to plan.”

    Some plan, Mr. Ron.

    BILLIONS SPENT AND STILL LOSING MONEY. WORST BUSINESS MODEL EVER.

    Mike Ditka could do better.

  3. Brokerage Bros

    Sounds like they are trying to take the Tesla approach to boost valuation…..when the market turns they will be a brokerage again is my bet

    Tesla: “We are not a car company. We are an AI/tech company”

    Uber Freight: “We are not a brokerage. We are a tech company”

  4. rogers centre

    What a joke !

    1.4 Billion and cant even make 1$ profit.

    They are pushing Rock bottom rates with Owner ops … not paying wait time or detention or layovers … and not making money themselves.

    All financed by shareholders. Killing the industry and drivers are to blame for taking their low rates.

Comments are closed.

John Kingston

John has an almost 40-year career covering commodities, most of the time at S&P Global Platts. He created the Dated Brent benchmark, now the world’s most important crude oil marker. He was Director of Oil, Director of News, the editor in chief of Platts Oilgram News and the “talking head” for Platts on numerous media outlets, including CNBC, Fox Business and Canada’s BNN. He covered metals before joining Platts and then spent a year running Platts’ metals business as well. He was awarded the International Association of Energy Economics Award for Excellence in Written Journalism in 2015. In 2010, he won two Corporate Achievement Awards from McGraw-Hill, an extremely rare accomplishment, one for steering coverage of the BP Deepwater Horizon disaster and the other for the launch of a public affairs television show, Platts Energy Week.